Las Vegas Review-Journal

The first cruise ship to board passengers at a U.S. port in 15 months is set to sail.

Industry suffered billions in losses during 15-month closure

- By Adriana Gomez Licon

MIAMI — The first cruise ship to board passengers at a U.S. port in 15 months is set to sail Saturday from the industry’s South Florida hub in a symbolic stride toward normalcy that will be watched closely by health experts as vaccines curb the coronaviru­s’ spread in the country.

Industry officials hope the Celebrity Edge’s voyage serves as a bookend for people for whom the gravity of the pandemic first hit home in the alarming reports last year of deadly outbreaks on crowded ships, with guests quarantine­d for weeks, vessels begging to dock and sickened passengers carried away on stretchers at ports.

“We are excited to be part of that,” said Russ Schwartz, a Florida school principal who is honeymooni­ng on the ship and is confident it will be smooth sailing. “Things have changed drasticall­y. Back then we really didn’t know much about the virus. Cruises at that point weren’t prepared.”

Celebrity Cruises, one of Royal Caribbean Cruises’ brands, says at least 95 percent of those boarding the Celebrity Edge have been vaccinated against the coronaviru­s in line with health requiremen­ts from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the ship will run at a reduced capacity.

It will be a luxurious voyage aboard a boat that was unveiled in December 2018 featuring a giant spa and multi-floor suites. The $1 billion vessel will be led by Capt. Kate Mccue, who in 2015 became the first American woman to captain a cruise ship and has drawn a following of more than 1 million on Tiktok and 250,000 on Instagram.

The stakes are high for cruise lines as they emerge from a Cdc-imposed shutdown that lasted 15 months. During that period the three industry giants — Carnival, Norwegian and Royal Caribbean — have had to raise more than $40 billion in financing just to stay afloat without any revenue.

Collective­ly they lost $20 billion last year and $4.5 billion in the first quarter of 2021, according to Securities and Exchange Commission filings.

“The cruise lines are getting up off their knees after getting crippled by COVID-19,” said Michael Winkleman,

a maritime attorney. “There’s just too much money at stake for the cruise lines not to get it right.” In other developmen­ts:

■ Hawaii is dropping its testing and quarantine rules for vaccinated domestic travelers in two weeks. Gov. David Ige says the state will drop the current travel restrictio­ns for fully vaccinated U.S. mainland travelers on July 8. Also on Friday, Hawaii health officials said that the more transmissi­ble and potentiall­y more harmful delta variant of COVID-19 has been detected in all four of the state’s major counties.

■ A Nigerian informatio­n technology worker has been indicted on federal wire fraud and identity theft charges after authoritie­s said he and his co-conspirato­rs filed false claims for pandemic-related unemployme­nt benefits in 17 states.

■ .South Carolina Gov. Henry Mcmaster signed a bill Thursday preventing people from suing companies over COVID-19. The new law protects businesses and other groups as long as they follow guidelines to protect people from the virus. Dozens of other states have passed similar measures.

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